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Posts archive for: December, 2008
  • Israel's vulnerability?

    Hi to everybody...an interesting article by Mary Dejevsky in the Independent today...
    Mary Dejevsky: Don't overlook Israel's vulnerability

    It is a paradox that this state has gained the reputation of an aggressor and bully
    Before you rush to judgement on the iniquity of Israel's lethal air strikes on the Gaza Strip – your own judgement, not a judgement borrowed from flailing politicians or vocal lobbyists for either side – could you answer one question. Have you ever been to Israel? I don't mean have you looked at a map of the Middle East or glanced across from the beach in Aqaba, or even visited the slums that, more than 50 years on, are absurdly still called Palestinian refugee camps. I mean have you ever been to Israel?

    Because if you have, you might understand how small and devoid of natural defences this country is. You would see that from north, south and east, they are vulnerable to siege from those who command the higher ground and the escape routes. And you would realise how fearful Israelis remain, even three generations on, that they could actually be driven into the sea in a matter of hours.

    And a second question, if I may. Deep down, do you believe that the state of Israel has a right to exist, or do you feel, if you are brutally honest, that the world would be a simpler and more harmonious place if only the victorious Second World War Allies had found a way of purging their post-Holocaust guilt without acquiescing in the creation of a Jewish homeland in what had been Palestine under the British mandate. Do you feel, even today, that Israel – and I'm talking about Israel, not the occupied territories – is Arab land that belongs, by ancestral right, to the Palestinians?

    Well, I have been to Israel; I have driven the length and breadth of it in more peaceful times; I have talked to its leaders and people. My overwhelming impression is not of war-lust, but of insecurity. You might scorn as paranoia the concerns of a developed country that this year spent 16 per cent of its state budget on defence, counts the US as its protector, and – it is widely accepted – has developed a nuclear weapon. But you have a duty to ask what came first: the fear of annihilation or the military capability to pre-empt it.

    As for Israel's right to exist, I do question the wisdom, let alone the justice, of planting a new state on land which someone else claims as historically theirs – Kosovo being a recent example. A country established artificially, with no regard to natural defences nor liberated by its own force, is liable to be not just vulnerable, but a source of friction for as long as the folk memory persists.

    Such ingrained disapproval may well underlie the tendency in much of the Western world to blame Israel, almost before it has done anything at all. If only, runs the unspoken thought, Israel had not existed, or at least had not occupied this particular piece of ground, all this murderous conflict could have been avoided.

    Both with Israel's fiercely condemned invasion of Lebanon two summers ago, and now with its air attacks on Gaza, however, these same two factors need to be kept in mind: on the one hand, Israel's continuing sense of its own insecurity; on the other, its internationally recognised right to exist. The point is that, having endorsed the creation of the state of Israel, the UN, as heir to the League of Nations, has an obligation to make sure that its continued existence is possible. Time and again, though, all manner of international guarantees have proved inadequate. Israel soon learnt that it would have to be able to look after itself.

    It is a paradox that one of the most vulnerable states in the Middle East has thus gained the reputation of an aggressor and bully. Nor have its enemies been above exploiting aspects of that vulnerability. The Yom Kippur war of 1973 was so called because it was launched by Egypt and Syria on one of Judaism's holiest days. All the peace treaties that Israel has so far been able to negotiate with its neighbours have been achieved, as an Israeli might see it, from a position of military strength.

    Israel's withdrawal from the Gaza Strip in the summer of 2005 was a rare instance of Israeli risk-taking – the first stage of a programme of withdrawals from occupied territory initiated, at some political peril, by the then Prime Minister, Ariel Sharon. It was a programme for which Mr Sharon received scant credit, either at the time he announced it or subsequently, because of a widespread assumption outside Israel that the military would manufacture some excuse not to comply.

    Israel's gamble was that, left in charge, the Palestinian Authority would be able to prevent rocket – or any other sort of attacks – on Israel. In the event, the gamble was lost. The Palestinian Authority, despite its best efforts, was unable to keep its extremists in check. An election was held that was legitimately won by the fundamentalist organisation, Hamas. Prevented from taking, or even sharing, power in the overall Palestinian Authority, Hamas seized power in Gaza. Sporadic rocket-fire into Israel escalated. Earlier this month Hamas said it would not renew a six-month ceasefire. After new rocket-strikes, Israel – in the throes of a keenly fought election campaign – released its firepower. Once again, the Palestinians of Gaza have worn their victimhood as a badge of honour.

    It might reasonably be asked how things might have been different. If the US and Israel had recognised the Hamas election victory; if the power-sharing deal between Fatah and Hamas had stuck; if Israel had not closed crossing-points with Gaza, citing its own security fears ... But this is not what happened.

    Now, as with the Lebanon war, Israel's critics charge that its action in Gaza has been "disproportionate" – "proportionate", presumably, being a few home-made rockets fired into civilian areas of Gaza as and when. Israel might retort, not unreasonably, that if Hamas wants war, it can have it: Israel's fight is for its future security. What these same Western critics should be asking, however, is why Israel feels so threatened that it resorts to such force, knowing full well the international opprobrium that will follow.

    And the answer is that if, in the past, the outside world – in the shape of the UN, the US, the Quartet or whoever – had shown itself willing and able to ensure Israel's security, then neither Israel nor the Gaza Palestinians need have resorted to force this winter. The excesses in Gaza, as in Lebanon before, are the consequence of a much earlier failure: the failure to enforce international law and truly guarantee Israel's right to exist.

  • The Latest Conspiracy

    Israel is attacking Gaza so that incoming President Obama will have something serious to cut his presidential teeth on - making peace between them! - or am I just being much too suspicious of US political motivations?

  • Speed Revolution - Staggeringly Delayed!

    I am, and have been for years, totally staggered that road vehicles, particularly private cars, have not had speed limiters included before now. Some commercial and public vehicles have had this for years, but the only thing stopping a speeding motorist has been road conditions and personal conscience!

    See today's BBC News website:
    http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/7803997.stm

  • Sign the Petition

    Hi to everybody...if you wish to, here's a petition to sign about Gaza...
    http://www.avaaz.org/en/gaza_time_for_peace/?cl=161550682&v=2605

  • Unwarranted slaughter

    Hi to everybody...today, I am so incensed by what Israel is doing in Gaza I will refrain from voicing my opinion...the Independent is full of it and worthy of a read so I've put up most of the articles covering it...the only point I want to put is that 20 Israelis have been killed by the hand made bombs lobbed into what the Palestinians of Gaza perceive to be enemy occupied territory in the past eight years...

    http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/israel-mounts-third-day-of-gaza-raids-1215323.html
    http://www.independent.co.uk/opinion/commentators/fisk/robert-fisk-leaders-lie-civilians-die-and-lessons-of-history-are-ignored-1215045.html
    http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/anne-penketh-lack-of-condemnation-as-good-as-approval-for-israel-1215052.html
    http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/israel-prepares-to-invade-gaza-1215048.html
    http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/for-the-children-it-is-like-living-in-hell-1215060.html
    http://www.independent.co.uk/opinion/commentators/johann-hari/johann-hari-the-true-story-behind-this-war-is-not-the-one-israel-is-telling-1214981.html

  • Not to be biased

    Hi to everybody...I showed you an article here yesterday and a follow up concurring that the Pope had been gay bashing in his own sweet way, but here's another article that does try to set the picture straight so thought I'd put it up as well to show that both sides should be put across here...

    Paul Vallely: Theological point that was lost in translation

    The idea the Pope was 'gay-bashing' to celebrate Christmas is seriously ill-informed

    Wednesday, 24 December 2008
    Related Articles

    Sometimes you can be too clever for your own good. Of no one is this more true than an intellectually-dense theologian who happens to be the leader of the world's billion Catholics. Step forward Pope Benedict XVI.

    The hapless pontiff has been reported around the globe as saying that saving humanity from homosexual or trans-sexual behaviour is as important as saving the rainforest. That is not what he said at all. In fact, his end-of-year address to Vatican bureaucrats does not even mention homosexuality. There is nothing even about sexual orientation and certainly no attack on same-sex marriages.

    What it does attack, rather opaquely, is gender theory – the idea that gender is not something entirely to do with what we inherit from nature, but something which is also socially constructed. Or, as the philosopher Simone de Beauvoir put it: "One is not born a woman, one becomes one."

    This the Pope sees as part of a wider malaise in which human beings want to control every aspect of life, sometimes paying no respect to the natural God-given order of things. What he actually seems to have in his sights is not homosexuality, but questions of bioethics and reproductive health. His concern is more cloning and whether children born by IVF have a right to a father. What he is resisting is the sense that all manner of advances must be pursued for the glory of science without regard to whether or not they are a good idea ethically.

    It's also, inevitably, about abortion. The Pope here is echoing long-standing Vatican concerns that secular visions on women's health issues, as espoused by official bodies such as the UN, are rooted in an errant view which always allows the rights of women to trump the rights of unborn children.

    Part of the problem is that because his remarks were an in-house address for his staff, he spoke in impenetrable theological shorthand. They were published only in German and Italian and many of those who have written lurid headlines about attacks on homosexuality have relied on secondhand accounts. There was also just a single paragraph in the end-of-term report that flits across a huge range of subjects over just six pages – and which is most concerned with green issues and fending off traditionalist criticisms of his role in World Youth Day in Sydney earlier this year.

    The Catholic Church has some pretty unappetising doctrines on homosexuality, to be sure. But the idea that the Pope was doing a bit of "gay-bashing" to celebrate Christmas is seriously ill-informed.

    There's also an interesting article by Deborah Orr as well, which you can read for yourself if you wish...
    http://www.independent.co.uk/opinion/commentators/deborah-orr/deborah-orr-weve-had-few-words-of-comfort-this-year-and-the-popes-not-helping-1209956.html

  • Good Grief...xmas message???

    Hi to everybody...thought you might like to read this if you haven't seen it already...hmmm....gets worse each year...

    Breaking News

    The Pope has said saving humanity from homosexual or transsexual behaviour is as important as saving the rainforest from destruction. Skip related content

    Gay groups slam Pope's claim

    Lesbian and gay Christians have denounced the claim which was given in a holiday address to the Curia, the Vatican's central administration.

    He said the church should protect man from the "destruction of himself", saying that tropical rainforests deserved protection but man as a creature "does not deserve any less".

    The Pope added: "The tropical forests do deserve our protection; but man, as a creature, does not deserve any less."

    Chief executive of the Lesbian and Gay Christian Movement, the Rev Sharon Ferguson, described his remarks as "totally irresponsible and unacceptable in any shape or form."

    She said: "It is more the case that we need to be saved from his comments. It is comments like that that justify homophobic bullying that goes on in schools and it is comments like that that justify gay bashing."

    Rev Ferguson continued: "There are still so many instances of people being killed around the world, including in western society, purely and simply because of their sexual orientation or their gender identity.

    "When you have religious leaders like that making that sort of statement then followers feel they are justified in behaving in an aggressive and violent way because they feel that they are doing God's work in ridding the world of these people."

    The Catholic Church teaches that homosexual orientation is not a sin but homosexual acts are. It opposes civil partnerships and gay marriage.

    As Prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, the Pope said homosexual inclination was not a sin, but it represented a "more or less strong tendency ordered toward an intrinsic moral evil".

  • Lies, lies and more lies

    Hi to everybody...here's a good article from the Independent today...worth a read...
    Yasmin Alibhai-Brown:
    They lied about Iraq in 2003, and they're still lying now

    Triumphalists are getting off on Iraq again, intoning hallelujah songs as they did after staging the fall of Saddam's statue then again and again, sweet lullabies to send us into blissful sleep and wake to a new dawn. The composers and orchestrators – Blair, Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld, Straw, Hoon and Rice – still believe history is on their side.

    Bush visited his troops at Camp Victory in Iraq this month and said: "Iraq had a record of supporting terror, of developing and using weapons of mass destruction, was routinely firing at American military personnel, systematically violating UN resolutions ... Iraqis, once afraid to leave their homes are going back to school and shopping in malls ... American troops are returning home because of success." Only one shoe and one without a sharp stiletto was hurled at him by Muntadar al-Zaidi, an Iraqi who begged to differ.

    Gordon Brown, also in Iraq, spun his own fairy tale of Baghdad, where everyone is living happily ever after and British soldiers come home proud heroes. The reality is that some of our soldiers are broken – physically and mentally – fighting this illegal and unpopular war and that too many did terrible things in the land of endless tears. General Sir Mike Jackson now blames the Americans for their "appalling" decisions. And yet he too insists the campaign was a success.

    Even the choral backers of Bush and Blair, once oh-so-influential, sound tinny now, out of tune. In a new book, The Liberal Defence Of Murder, Richard Seymour names many usually enlightened individuals who cheered on the disgraceful crusade and have now gone silent. Others who supported the adventure have escaped through passages of ingenious exculpation. Most Tories, for example, now say they were hypnotised by the Government's false dossiers.

    Really? Even hard-of-hearing Mrs Kirkpatrick down the road – she's 79 – understood that we were being deceived. The UN weapons inspectors Hans Blix and Scott Ritter both told us there were no WMDs. Ken Clarke said this weekend: "I opposed the Iraq war. I'm not sure whether anybody believed Saddam had weapons of mass destruction that were a threat to anybody. Most American spies didn't believe that, most British spies didn't believe that and most of the Foreign Office didn't believe that".

    Nor did the Opposition but it still backed Blair because Conservatives love wars and one against a swarthy potentate was irresistible.

    So to Iraqis, the beneficiaries of our noble "sacrifices". This week Nahla Hussein, a left-wing, feminist Kurdish Iraqi, was shot and beheaded for her campaigning zeal. Fifty-seven Iraqis were blown up in Kirkuk. Christians in Mosul are being savagely persecuted and sharia law has replaced the 1959 codified entitlements given to women in family disputes. Women in Iraq have fewer rights today than under Saddam. Yes, there is some normality in parts but tensions between Shias and Sunnis are explosive. When troops are withdrawn next year, expect more bloodshed. The resources of Iraq, meanwhile, are being plundered.

    For these blessings, one million Iraqis had to die and their children still suffer from illnesses caused by our weapons and our war. Five million Iraqis are displaced and, of these, the US took in 1,700. It is easier for an Iraqi cat or dog to gain entry to the land of the free. Try Baghdad Pups, which offers (for a hefty fee) to get the adopted pets of US soldiers into America. In 2007, 39,000 Iraqis sought refuge in the EU countries and we took in 300. Sweden, which has no responsibility for the havoc, gave refuge to 18,000.

    I have been talking to exiled Iraqis in London. One young man has a child whose mother killed herself after giving birth during the war. He both loves and hates this country, as did Bilal Abdullah, the NHS doctor convicted for dreadful plans to blow up people in the UK. A beautiful Iraqi woman told me her nephew gave plastic flowers to our soldiers when first they went into Basra. Last year, they shot him dead, mistaking him for an enemy.

    On Friday, I met an Iraqi artist, Yousif Nasser, whose studio has become a hub for other exiles, artists, musicians and the mentally ill seeking art therapy. A gentle, melancholic man, he showed me his series titled "Black Rain", enormous works depicting the violence in Iraq: "There are no bodies, only pieces, bits, of a little bit of this and that. People don't buy my pictures – they are too dark. How can I tell you what has happened to my country? I have no words, only these images."

    I have words, too weak and inadequate to carry the rage felt by millions at the renewed arrogance of the villains who first devastated Iraq and now garland themselves. Lies, lies and now delusion. There is no glory to be salvaged in this desert.

  • The Beatification of Mother Teresa

    The Beatification of Mother Teresa

    Mother Teresa was beatified (turned into a saint) in October 2003. The text below is an extract from a review by Norman Taylor of Cristopher Hitchens' book "The Missionary Position: Mother Teresa in Theory and Practice", which was published in 1997.

    Does the picture we get here look like that of a saint to you? I have bolded some of the key passages.

    Tom.

    --------------------------

    Some people worship Mother Teresa and, most unfortunately, many will support her fanatical campaign against contraception and abortion. But nobody can ignore the facts that India's population of nearly one billion is disastrous; its unemployment is 50%, as is its illiteracy. When Mother Teresa was asked if she would agree that there are too many children in India she replied: "I do not agree because God always provides. He provides for the flowers and the birds, for everything in the world he has created. And these little children are his life. There never can be enough." The author remarks, "if it were true that God always provides, then obviously there would be no need for the Missionaries of Charity in the first place". So what we see is an exercise in propaganda for the Vatican's population policy. Mother Teresa's support seems grotesque; she must know the suffering and misery caused by this papal policy.

    Mother Teresa has been favoured with huge sums of money during the past 30 years, but patients' illnesses have been wrongly diagnosed by unqualified sisters and volunteers unable to distinguish between the curable and incurable . Mother Teresa prefers providence to planning, and the very strictest economy is always enforced - much to the detriment of the patient's interests. It is interesting to note that, despite the enormous sums involved ($50 million remains in a cheque account in the Bronx), needles are used over and over again, and are rinsed under the cold water tap. The nuns' answer to "why are you not boiling water and sterilizing your needles?" was simple: "There's no point. There's no time." Perhaps the patients take too long to die, and hastening death saves money. Cynical as that may be, Mother Teresa's global income is more than enough to equip several first class clinics like some of the finest in the West that she herself has checked into. To a person in the last agonies of cancer, and suffering unbearable pain, she said with a smile: "You are suffering like Christ on the cross. So Jesus must be kissing you." A sign on the wall of the morgue of Mother Teresa's Home for the Dying reads "I am going to Heaven today".

    Mary Loudon, a volunteer in Calcutta, was shocked by what she saw there. "It looked a bit like the photos of Belsen", she said. "All patients had shaved heads, there were old stretcher beds, no chairs, and not much medical care or painkillers". In another home, despite the existence of huge sums of money: "The sisters are rarely allowed to spend money on the poor they are trying to help. Instead they are forced to plead poverty, thus manipulating generous, credulous people into giving more goods, services and cash." So great wealth has no good effect on the lives of patients and volunteers. In a damp house heating remains off throughout winter and several sisters consequently got TB. This was stated by a woman who left the Missionaries of Charity for the same reason she joined it, "a love of her fellow humans".

    Mother Teresa has a San Francisco hostel named The Gift of Love; it is for homeless men with HIV. They are not allowed to watch TV or smoke or drink or invite friends, not even when they are dying, and so, of course, they are exceptionally depressed. One man said how afraid he was of dying without morphine. It is hard to find anyone with a good word for The Gift of Love.

    Charles Keating was a notorious American swindler now serving a 10-year sentence
    for his part in the Savings and Loans scandal. He was generous with the money he stole from small investors. He gave Mother Teresa 1½ million dollars and the use of his private jet; in return she allowed him to make use of her prestige on several important occasions and gave him a personal crucifix. During the course of his trial she wrote to the court seeking clemency for the conservative Catholic fundamentalist and notorious thief. It was a suspiciously naive letter which did nothing to influence the judge . It prompted the Deputy District Attorney in Los Angeles County to write with some facts about Keating's crimes, about which Mother Teresa knew nothing.

    After referring to Keating's conviction for defrauding 17 individuals of $900,000 he concluded with this statement "You urge Judge Ito to look into his heart - as he sentences Charles Keating - and do what Jesus would do. I submit the same challenge to you. Ask yourself what Jesus would do if he were given the fruits of a crime; what Jesus would do if he were in possession of money which had been stolen; what Jesus would do if he were being exploited by a thief to ease his conscience. I submit that Jesus would promptly and unhesitatingly return the stolen property to its rightful owners. You should do the same. You have been given money by Mr Keating that he has been convicted of stealing by fraud. Do not permit him the "indulgence" he desires. Do not keep the money. Return it to those who worked for it and earned it! If you contact me I will put you in direct contact with the rightful owners of the property now in your possession. Sincerely, Paul W. Turley." Three years later Turley had received no reply to his letter. Nor can anybody account for the missing money; saints, it seems, are immune to audit. This is not the only example of Mother Teresa's surreptitious attitude to money, nor of her hypocritical protestations about the beauty of poverty.

    This immensely well-researched book is a great credit to its author. The prospects of Mother Teresa bluffing more millions has, I hope, been sharply reduced. There are, of course, Catholics who have worked honestly and selflessly and sacrificed much without an ulterior motive, but she is not one of them. It would be reasonable to be suspicious of anyone who is popular with the like of American crook, Keating, exposed villain, Robert Maxwell, Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan. And when the response to those responsible for an avoidable disaster is "forgive" we know that Mother Teresa remains a constant barrier to progress and justice. Without doubt she is an extremely successful and shrewd campaigner, but readers seeking for signs of compassion may find - as I did - that it is secondary to the promotion of religious dogma. If it is thought that I have revealed too much, please read the book. There is a lot more damning evidence to provide us with a reminder that "all is not gold that glitters".

  • Parliamentary Reform

    Political pundits on the BBC radio 4 'Week in Westminster' programme suggest that in order to encourage the public to take more interest in electing their MPs, the ordinary members of the House of Commons needed to have more moderating influence over the PM and his cabinet. Surely my suggestion that the voting in the Commons should be by secret ballot would help with that?

    I plan to continue this discussion with postings in the new year, as people are probably too busy with the holiday season to properly consider these ideas. - See you then.

    Meanwhile, my heartfelt Seasonal Greetings to you all. :)

  • Following Technomist on the Royal Mail

    Hi to everybody...heard some depressing news on the news a couple of days ago about TNT and it's possible buy into or buy out of the Royal Mail...abroad, where TNT now manages the mail, it sacked all the posties and gave the post to casuals including young ones similar to a paper round that was...the horror stories that came out of that were numerous of dumped sacks of mail when the youngsters had too much to deliver in the hours they had to get everything done...is this what Mandelson is proposing for our PO? It really needs to be opposed most strongly as it is an extremely bad idea.

  • How did we get here and when will we be gone?

    I sometimes wonder who these World Leaders talk to when they go on tours of foreign hot-spots. Brown, who recently claimed to have met all the big players, confidently told us only a week ago or so ago that the British army will be out of Iraq by July. It seems that Gordon Brown forgot to ask the Iraqi Parliament, who have just decided, in effect, that the army has to have implemented its marching orders by New Year. It will be interesting to see how the great democrat responds to this mother of all votes by the Iraqis. Looks like we are going to have that long awaited inquiry into the circumstances of how we got into Iraq a bit sooner than the government was bargaining for.

  • A questionable sentence?

    Hi to everybody...here's a piece of news I heard yesterday...do you think sentencing this man to prison is justified?
    Another jail term for naked walker
    Steve Gough
    Mr Gough wore only a blanket tied around his waist with a belt
    A naked rambler has again been found guilty of breach of the peace and sentenced to a spell in a Scots jail.

    Stephen Gough, 44, from Hampshire, was convicted after walking through a village in Easter Ross in the Highlands clad only in a hat and boots.

    Gough has been arrested several times for his naked rambling, which he said is a protest against negative attitudes towards the human body.

    He could be released in days as he has already served a month on remand.

    There is no law saying thou shalt not go naked
    Stephen Gough
    Dingwall Sheriff Court heard how police received a 999 call from a resident who had spotted Gough walking on Drummond Road in Evanton, Easter Ross, on 29 November.

    He was arrested just hours after being released from prison in Inverness where he was serving a three-month jail term for committing a similar offence on Cromarty Bridge.

    He began his crusade to promote the virtues of going naked in June, setting off on a 900-mile trek from Land's End in England to John O'Groats in Scotland. His route also took him into Wales.

    Gough, who was also found guilty of breaching bail conditions, argued that what he was doing was permitted under the rights of freedom of expression in the Human Rights Act.

    Sentencing him, Sheriff Edward Savage said: "You seemed determined, Mr Gough, to break the law."

    The sheriff jailed Gough for three months, backdated to 1 December.

    Police station

    Evanton resident Robert Thow, 52, told the court that he saw Gough walking through the village while he was in his car.

    He said he contacted the police because: "I think there is a time and a place for it. I did not think Evanton was the place for it, or any other village."

    Constable Ian Davidson said Gough was eventually found near a quarry on the Novar estate and taken to a local police station.

    Gough appeared in court wearing a scarlet prison blanket tied with a police belt and a pair of handcuffs.

    He said he wanted to "celebrate myself as a human being" and added that he had continued his walk as a protest at being continually arrested.

    Gough told the court: "All I am doing is dressing how I want to dress and believing what I want to believe.

    "There is no law saying thou shalt not go naked."

    The former Royal Marine alleged that he got a warm reception in Evanton.

    He said people on a bus waved at him, workers on a building site cheered and he had numerous requests for people to have their pictures taken with him.

    He has 100 miles to go to complete his journey.

  • Parliamentary Equality

    This is my third revolutionary reform for the UK Parliament. While it is not my original idea, I did reach this conclusion before discovering others had proposed it before.

    Equality is, in fact, a many-headed hydra. However many heads you chop off, more appear - racial, ethnic, height, weight and age to list but a few. Therefore I am strictly limiting this reform to sexual equality. To go beyond that or even to acknowledge that there are more than two sexes is quite impractical.

    The reform is simple: Double the size of each Parliamentary constituency (by amalgamating it with the most convenient neighbour) and giving each of these new constituencies two MPs, one male and one female.

    Both sexes of MP would be voted for by the full constituency, so each voter would have two votes; one for a male candidate and one for a female.

    The result would be a parliament sexually balanced equally between male and female MPs.

    When I complete my list of suggested reforms, I shall post a summary incorporating such comments that I feel are justifyied, so do please make your views known, on both this and the previous two ideas.

  • Coincidence or what...LOL...

    Hi to everybody...Munzly has shared a lot of very interesting videos with us lately, and the ensuing discussions have been equally interesting...mainly, they've been on the quantum world and time in particular and consciousness...today, I turned on the radio as is my want on a Thursday morning to listen to 'In our Time' with Melvyn Bragg and hey presto, he had three scientists on it discussing 'The Physics of Time'...coincidence or entanglement...HLOL...have no idea but this happens to us a lot...
    Here's where you can find it if you wish to...
    http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/history/inourtime/inourtime.shtml
    It's an interesting one today...let me know what you think if you do decide to listen to it or have heard already this morning....

  • Parliamentary Elections

    Parliamentary Elections

    Following my revolutionary suggestion that MPs should vote by secret ballot in the House of Commons (see: Parliamentary Voting) I would also like to suggest that the electorate should subject the government to 'continuous assessment' instead of the current intermittent system of general elections every four years.

    This could be achieved by phasing the service periods of all the MPs so a group came up for election every month. By this system, the actions of the government would be, as it were, available for public comment on a short-term regular basis. General elections would be discontinued, governments changing for other reasons (see future posting).

    Obviously there would be a changeover period, starting with the last general election ever. After which the length of service of each MP would be randomised so that an equal number of constituencies would have an election each month. Whether these should be regionally grouped or spread out would be a matter of practicality to be decided when the MPs' service periods were phased.

    There would also need to be a strict ceiling on election expenditure, which would save money in the long term. The system should also stop the practice of governments attempting to bribe voters with popular legislation just before a general election. With a group election happening every month this would soon prove impractical.

    I have a number of further postings to make on the subject of reforming Parliament, some of which address the more obvious drawbacks of this suggestion. A reduction in the number of MPs will be one of them (by novel means), as will the creation of governments, choice of PM etc. along with moves to improve the balance between the sexes among MPs.

  • Old Etonian to the Rescue?

    As discussed in a post a few months ago which attracted some comments from people unable to post as freely as they like, or even get information in a country where the internet is censored on these topics, it is still possible in Thailand to be arrested for offending the monarch. The Economist has described the lese majeste laws in Thailand as the most ferociously-enforced in the world.

    In the case of Harry Nicholaides, an Australian writer, their protection from any word of criticism includes not just the revered King, but the Crown Prince.

    The news for Harry Nicholaides that the new Thai Prime Minister is an Old Etonian 1st class honours graduate of Oxford University may bring him some sparkle of hope. I hope those hopes are not dashed by the huge number of other priorities the new Prime Minister, Abhisit Vejjajiva, now has on his plate following the kinds of violence and political division which has threatened to bring the country to its knees in the past few months.

  • Causes of Conflicts

    Why wars happen

    Dec 16th 2008
    From Economist.com

    Analysing the causes of conflicts

    THERE have been nine wars and almost 130 violent conflicts across the world this year, according to an annual report released on Monday December 15th by the Heidelberg Institute for International Conflict Research, a think-tank. The study classifies conflict broadly to include peaceful disputes over politics or borders (low intensity), as well as those involving sporadic or constant violence (medium or high intensity). In 2008 previously non-violent conflicts escalated into violence in countries such as Kenya and Yemen. Ideological change is both the most common cause of conflict and the root of most wars, but there is rarely only one cause of dispute. Congo's ongoing conflict encompasses a battle for its mineral resources and, according to some, an invasion by another state, Rwanda.

    Conflicts

    [I'm not saying anything here, I'm just posting it for interest for all you armchair revolutionaries]

  • Parliamentary Voting

    Here's a good question: Why don't MPs get a secret vote?

    I thought they represented their constituents, but if their votes are known to their fellow MPs and their party officials, then they have to toe the party line even if that is not the way they know their constituents would have wanted them to vote. Surely a secret ballot would be more democratic?

    (This post repeated from the Munzly blog)

  • The Sale of Royal Mail

    My initial reaction on the announcement by Lord Mandelson that he wants to sell off the Royal Mail to private, foreign owners, was that one of anger. Words like 'corrupt' and 'whore' sprang to mind. I have wondered since whether it is just because it is Mandelson's involvement that has made me instinctively dislike, and with such a venom, the idea of selling off an important and iconic British public service.

  • Rather Good

    I enjoyed this. I hope you do too.

    http://rathergood.com/christmas

  • A Thought Unconscious

    ...or rather a thought on consciousness:

    I've been mulling over the various vids and discussions we've had on this group blog and over at the Munzly place, and would like to propose the following as a definition of the relationship between the Conscious and Subconscious Minds.

    I suggest that the Conscious Mind acts as 'Coach' to the Subconscious Mind in much the same way as a sports coach does with a team. Like a coach, it doesn't need to be there all the time and its main purposes are to guide, train, moderate and hopefully improve the team's performance.

    Perhaps others would like to expand or dispute this definition in the comments section?

  • Regarding the President Bush shoe throwing incident

    Which you can see here:

    There is some information on the follow-on from the incident here:

    http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/middle_east/7783608.stm

    I've been wondering if this incident will result in shoes having to be removed whenever someone directly responsible for starting a war that was illegal under international law and based on trumped up lnformation appears in public. I'm prepared to bet that they were all frisked on the way in, so tighter security might be the lasting result of this.

    Bush probably experienced a moment of terror there, but nothing like what the people in Iraq have had to put up with since the invasion. Also nothing like the suffering experienced by all the military personnel and their families sent there under false pretences.

    Tom.

  • Revolutionary Music

    DominicGee posted some revolutionary music the other day. This set me off to look for something I have been looking for for ages, though the quality is very poor.

    With all due respect to the many many musicians who have written stirring words over the years, this is what I call real revolutionary music. Tekle Hiwket Adhanom, is one of the world's greatest little-known guitar heroes, seeing as he seems to have worked out how to play like this entirely on his own. He was the sound that the Eritreans fought and died to during their revolutionary war of independence. A tape of his music was practically the only thing an Eritrean girl called Liteski owned in the world, when I met her in 1985 after she had fled to Khartoum.

  • Jack Straw 2

    As I mentioned in my previous post, more people than usual seem to have knives out for Jack Straw. The 3000 pound payment revelations have been followed up with a story in the Telegraph about a 130million pounds expenditure on a building, which seems rather expensive and for which he is being blamed.

    This all follows a week in which Lord Lester abandoned his role as Constitutional adviser, because the Brown government's attitude to Human Rights was so 'dismal'. Lord Lestor is particularly angry with Straw.

    An interview Straw gave in the Mail has also been fed into the Guardian, where his back-peddling on Human Rights might not go down too well with their readership. Shami Chakrabarti, the director of Liberty, is quoted as having said: "The public will have to judge this latest headline and decide if Britain's freedoms are safe in Mr Straw's hands."

    Another person who may be angry with Jack Straw is Jacqui Smith, who was rumoured to have been unimpressed with his slightly slow support and more fleet-footed personal denial of any knowledge of what was going on when she was under fire in the press in the last few days over the Damian Green affair.

    In the Telegraph he is described as the 'Great Triangulator', playing off all sides, but the article warns that "unless the great triangulator is careful, he may disappear up his own hypotenuse".

  • Jack Straw, Lord Chancellor of Great Britain

    I was thinking the other day that it would be an original idea to ask my current energy provider to take me out for a steak dinner on the proceeds of all the profits they have been making since the gulf war and their end-of-the-Bush-era price hiking. They needn't call it a windfall tax or anything, just a nice gesture to a satisfied customer. In celebration of nothing in particular... lets just say its a kind gesture for me turning up for work year after year, no strings attached. A nice daydream, of course, not something that happens in the real world.

    Unless, of course, you are Jack Straw. Jack Straw managed to have a pointless 3000 pound junket paid for by a Texan energy company on a similar flimsy excuse some four years ago. It seems that to celebrate his fine time in public service of this country, the kind Texans decided to put three grand in the kitty when a few close pals held a bash for Jack four years ago.

    He had so much to celebrate of course. Those were the days when he was the kind of person that Texan gas companies would just love to push to boat out for. And he'd come such a long way, after all.

    Having been abandoned as a child by his insurance salesman father, John Whitaker Straw changed his name to Jack at school, apparently in a fantasy homage to Jack Straw (genuine leader and man of the people in a way our John has never quite managed to be). He learned his politics in the student union, taking office in the NUS at a time when students were highly politicised and could spot a rum 'un only at his third attempt.

    Like the later Blair, he also became a barrister and practiced criminal law for a time. Thus he prepared himself in the real world for a career at Westminster. His early career, which will be of interest to those who want the full majesty of the legal book thrown at Damian Green for leaking, includes an unsavoury episode where he allegedly examined someone's confidential social security records on behalf of cabinet minister Barbara Castle, in order to find dirt on the Liberals. (Castle herself, the story goes, had been quietly asked by Harold Wilson for the information). Straw is said to have informed Castle that when he went to examine the file, he found it was missing. The journalist Barrie Penrose has however alleged that Straw subsequently leaked details from the file to the media. Straw has, wise man, kept mum on the matter ever since, and is not saying too much about the Green Affair as far as I can tell.

    With that early honing of the black political arts as preparation for High Office, Straw was well equipped later to be Home Secretary and reduce the Home Office to a shambles. He also exercised his excellent judgment to write , in turning down an asylum request in 2000 from a man fleeing Saddam Hussein's regime, that "we have faith in the integrity of the Iraqi judicial process and that you should have no concerns if you haven’t done anything wrong."

    He then became Foreign Secretary, to replace Robin Cook, when Blair decided with the Americans to boot Saddam Hussain out of power and save the world from WMDs. There is not that much I remember about what he did as Foreign Secretary. Blair was doing everything important as far as I can recall, but Straw may have been allowed to tinker a bit round the edges of the already set-out policy directions. I do remember him droning on interminably on Radio 4 pretending he was a lawyerly type who cared about law and evidence and how he didn't ever want to deceive people.

    This alleged interest in facts and law, and possibly tinkering with policy regarding how they are obtained, may have been bad luck for the people of the Chagos Islands. These islands in the Indian Ocean include Diego Garcia, and are part of the British Indian Ocean Territory (BIOT). In 2000 the British High Court had upheld the claims of the islanders that an Ordinance which had been enacted to ensure their removal from their homes while Diego Garcia was leased to the American was unlawful. Robin Cook, the British Foreign Secretary at the time, did not appeal.

    In 2002, Parliament enacted legislation which gave all Chagossians the right to obtain British citizenship and granted the islanders the right to return to the Archipelago. On June 10, 2004, Jack Straw was responsible for two Orders-in-Council re-establishing immigration controls on the islands and effectively banning the islanders from returning home, reversing the 2000 court decision. Diego Garcia is a US military base which has been used as a staging post for the rendition of suspects for torture, as well as refuelling and rearming bombers used so inaccurately to target various places which would otherwise be a long way beyond America's reach, most recently in Afganistan.

    Jack in those heady days knew whose bread to butter and which side of it to smear his knife. He knew how to keep a secret, after all. It was on his watch also that the one-sided extradition treaty with the United States was signed, though the "credit" for that seems to have been hogged by Baroness Scotland.

    So what has gone wrong for Jack since? Why was he removed from the Foreign Office and why has his star fallen so far that the dirt about his luncheon expenses is now making it into the public domain and being allowed to bring him so much embarrassment? It is always possible to put it down simply to internal party rivalries.

    There is one possible view that neither Blair nor Brown were unmoved by the green eyed monster of jealously at Straw's close relationship with US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, manifested publically by her visit to Straw's Blackburn constituency. He may have found he was too close to the Americans, in the wrong way, which could be seen as a threat.

    There is also the alternative view however that he was not close enough. In that theory he is portrayed as not quite as lunatic as his American masters, so that in April 2006, when he heard of reports of secret White House plans to target Iranian nuclear installations with bunker busting nuclear bombs he described them "completely nuts". William Rees-Mogg has said in The Times that there was evidence that Straw was subsequently removed from this post upon the request of the Bush administration, due to this expressed opposition to bombing Iran.

    My view? I tend to think he is tired and that maybe he's never really been that good a politician in the first place. He can be a bit of an annoying know-it-all after all. There are also younger men snapping at the heals of the old guard. As with many politicians, what we are also possibly seeing is the fag end of his career fizzling out.

    Yes, he is Lord Chancellor still, after a short spell at a couple of Ruritanian jobs as Leader of the House of Commons and Lord Privy Seal. Blair also gave him a couple of "important" roles, as a face-saver when he was pushed out of the Foreign Office. Anyone remember House of Lords reform and looking at party funding? Neither role lead to anything much like an "achievement" nor were they probably ever intended to. The current job title, as grand as it sounds, does not even make him a Lord, nor does it make him a Chancellor. I will be interested to see what if anything he achieves and how long he will stay in this current job.

  • Revolutionary Music

    I was going to post this on Diverse Sounds, but I couldn't decide where it would be more appropriate. If any of you are feeling rebellious at the moment, you may find this tune a bit of a battle cry... ;)

    Akala - Bullshit

    This tune is about 4 years old now I think.

    Anyone else got ideas for revolutionary songs?

  • Just to be fair...the debunker...

    Hi to everybody...just to be objective and put both sides up...here's an intelligent debunking...until you get to the end and then he goes into realms better left out...:))

  • Something to look forward to...not!

    Hi to everybody...worth a look...makes our efforts to control global warming rather futile to say the least...there are other more scientific explanations of these possible events in other videos, but this ties in ancient predictions...

  • Couldn't put it better myself...

    Depending on the state of your religion/philosophy balance, Pat Condell will either annoy you to Hell or get you nodding sagely.

    There's plenty more like this, covering a broad swath of controversies on his website Pat Condell's Godless Comedy - available as either online video or downloadable MP3s.

  • Urgent action required

    Hi to everybody...to anybody here amongst the group who may be interested, Avaaz.org, the World Action group has sent out an urgent request...
    http://www.avaaz.org/en/merkel_lead_on_climate/?cl=156866913&v=2549

  • The Price of Silence

    Hi to everybody...I've just been sent this to watch by Amnesty International...

    Here's the letter accompanying it...
    http://pth.amnestyusa.org/?tr=y&auid=4312670

  • Gordon Brown, our Saviour

    You have to hand it to the guy. Sometimes it seems people just can't parody Gordon Brown enough.

    Just look at what he was saying about himself at Prime Minister's Question time today. This is our Unelected Leader speaking:

    http://www.order-order.com/2008/12/crash-gordon-saved-world.html

  • What sort of revolutionaries are we?

    So what sort of revolutionaries are we? The title 'Armchair Revolutionaries' suggests either that we're too lazy to do anything practical or that it's just all talk.

    Not only that but there is a possibility that people whose grasp of English or even common sense, may see the 'Revolutionaries" part of the title and think we're about something entirely different and rather more anti-social.

    Of course, hopefully we all appreciate that what is intended here is an opportunity for the overturn of mistaken ideas, prejudice, inflexibility and entrenched attitudes along with the presentation of interesting alternatives and ground breaking or novel ideas - or at least that's how I see it... :)

  • Science Lectures on the Munzly blog.

    If the science lectures I posted in this group blog were of interest to you, you might like the following:

    George Smoot: Design of the Universe.
    An extremely interesting lecture about the history of the Universe:
    http://munzly.blog.co.uk/2008/12/02/design-of-the-universe-george-smoot-5151206

    David Gross: The Coming Revolutions in Theoretical Physics.
    http://munzly.blog.co.uk/2008/12/02/david-gross-the-coming-revolutions-in-theoretical-physics-5152589

    Stuart Hameroff: Quantum Consciousness for Dummies.
    "If you think you understand quantum computing, you're either lying or crazy" Richard Feynman.
    http://munzly.blog.co.uk/2008/12/04/stuart-hameroff-quantum-consciousness-for-dummies-5160669

    Richard Sheldrake: The Extended Mind.
    Recent Experimental Evidence.
    http://munzly.blog.co.uk/2008/12/03/the-extended-mind-recent-experimental-evidence-5156605

    Group members who visit my blog will have already had the opportunity to view them.

  • The Temporal Lobes and God

    The Temporal Lobes and God
    V.S. Ramachandran discussing a case study about seizures in the temporal Lobes and religious experiences, but don't worry, none of this proves or disproves the existence of God.

    Part 1

    Part 2

    NOTE: This clip seems to cut off rather suddenly at the end of Part 2, but so far I haven't found any continuation - If I do I will add them here.

  • V.S. Ramachandran at Beyond Belief 2.0

    V.S. Ramachandran at Beyond Belief 2.0

    Part 1

    Part 2

    Part 3

  • V.S. Ramachandran at Beyond Belief 2006

    V.S. Ramachandran at Beyond Belief 2006 Part 1

    Part 2

  • Some more on conciousness


    Consciousness, Qualia, and Self:
    You cannot understand qualia without simultaneously understanding self.

  • Article from Reuters

    December 3rd, 2008

    Einstein, insanity and the war on drugs

    - Bernd Debusmann is a Reuters columnist. The opinions expressed are his own -

    Albert Einstein defined insanity as doing the same thing repeatedly and expecting different results. His definition fits America’s war on drugs, a multi-billion dollar, four-decade exercise in futility.

    The war on drugs has helped turn the United States into the country with the world’s largest prison population. (Noteworthy statistic: The U.S. has 5 percent of the world’s population and around 25 percent of the world’s prisoners). Keen demand for illicit drugs in America, the world’s biggest market, helped spawn global criminal enterprises that use extreme violence in the pursuit of equally extreme profits.

    Over the years, the war on drugs has spurred repeated calls from social scientists and economists (including three Nobel prize winners) to seriously rethink a strategy that ignores the laws of supply and demand.

    Under the headline “The Failed War on Drugs,” Washington’s respected, middle-of-the-road Brookings Institution said in a November report that drug use had not declined significantly over the years and that “falling retail drug prices reflect the failure of efforts to reduce the supply of drugs.”

    Cocaine production in South America stands at historic highs, the report noted.

    Like other think tanks, Brookings stopped short of recommending a radical departure from past policies with a proven track record of failure such as spending billions on crop eradication in Latin America and Asia while allotting paltry sums in comparison to rehabilitating addicts.

    Enter Law Enforcement Against Prohibition (LEAP), an organization started in 2002 by police officers, judges, narcotics agents, prison wardens and others with first-hand experience of implementing policies that echo the prohibition of alcohol. Prohibition, now widely regarded a dismal and costly failure of social engineering, came to an end 75 years ago this week.

    As LEAP sees it, the best way to fight drug crime and violence is to legalize drugs and regulate them the same way alcohol and tobacco is now regulated. “We repealed prohibition once and we can do it again,” one of the group’s co-founders, Terry Nelson, told a Washington news conference on December 2. “We cannot arrest our way out of this problem.”

    FROM AL CAPONE TO DRUG CARTELS

    “In the 20s and 30s, we had Al Capone and his gangsters getting rich and shooting up our streets,” said Nelson, who spent a 32-year government career fighting drugs in the U.S. and Latin America. “Today we have criminal gangs, cartels, Taliban and al-Qaeda profiting from the prohibition of drug sales and wreaking havoc all over the world. The correlation is obvious.”

    The before-and-after sequence is so obvious that the U.S. Congress passed a resolution in September noting that the 1933 repeal of alcohol prohibition had replaced a “dramatic increase” in organized crime with “a transparent and accountable system of distribution and sales” that generated billions of dollars in tax revenues and boosted the sick economy.

    That’s where advocates of drug legalization want to go now, and some of them hope that the similarities between today’s deep economic crisis and the Great Depression will result in a more receptive audience for their pro-legalization arguments among lawmakers and government leaders.

    The budgetary impact of legalizing drugs would be enormous, according to a study prepared to coincide with the 75th anniversary of prohibition’s end by Harvard economist Jeffrey A. Miron. He estimates that legalizing drugs would inject $76.8 billion a year into the U.S. economy — $44.1 billion through savings on law enforcement and at least $32.7 billion in tax revenues from regulated sales.

    Miron published a similar study in 2005 looking only at the budgetary effect of legalizing marijuana, the most widely used illicit drug in the United States. That study was endorsed by more than 500 economists, including Nobel laureates Milton Friedman of Stanford University, George Akerlof of the University of California and Vernon Smith of George Mason University.

    “We urge…the country to commence an open and honest debate about marijuana prohibition,” the economists said in an open letter to President George W. Bush, congress, governors and state legislators. “At a minimum, this debate will force advocates of current policy to show that prohibition has benefits sufficient to justify the cost to taxpayers, foregone tax revenues and numerous ancillary consequences that result from marijuana prohibition.”

    The advocates of current policy, led by outgoing President George W. Bush’s drug czar, John Walters, never took up the challenge to discuss cost-benefit equations. His Office of National Drug Control Policy has focused, with the single-minded determination of a moral crusader, on doing the same thing over and over again.

    But the United States is not alone in pursuing drug strategies that are based more on wishful thinking than on sober analysis. If you put faith in declarations by the United Nations, a “drug-free world” is an attainable goal and the war on drugs all but over.

    In 1998, a special session of the U.N. General Assembly forecast that the illicit cultivation of the coca bush, the cannabis plant and the opium poppy would be eliminated or significantly reduced by the year 2008, a deadline that also applied to “significant and measurable results in the field of demand reduction.”

    The clock is ticking towards midnight, December 31, 2008.

  • Horizon - What time is it?

    Hi to everybody....I don't know whether anybody here saw the latest Horizon called 'What time is it?' If you didn't see it, it is well worth a look, particular the end when the quantum world is discussed...also the brane theory similar to the M Theory is also mentioned...
    This is where you can watch it again...
    http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/b00fyl5z/Horizon_Do_You_Know_What_Time_It_Is/

    Let me know what you think if you do watch it...

  • Bad news all round

    Hi to everybody...here's an article in the Independent this morning...alarming to say the least...whatever happened to the citizen's right to privacy?

    The Big Brother state – by stealth

    Thousands of unaccountable civil servants given access to our most intimate personal information

    By Robert Verkaik, Law Editor
    Thursday, 4 December 2008

    Personal information detailing intimate aspects of the lives of every British citizen is to be handed over to government agencies under sweeping new powers. The measure, which will give ministers the right to allow all public bodies to exchange sensitive data with each other, is expected to be rushed through Parliament in a Bill to be published tomorrow.

    The new legislation would deny MPs a full vote on such data-sharing. Instead, ministers could authorise the swapping of information between councils, the police, NHS trusts, the Inland Revenue, education authorities, the Driver and Vehicle Licensing Authority, the Department for Work and Pensions and other ministries.

    Opponents of the move accused the Government of bringing in by stealth a data-sharing programme that exposed everyone to the dangers of a Big Brother state and one of the most intrusive personal databases in the world. The new law would remove the right to protection against misuse of information by thousands of unaccountable civil servants, they added.

    Thomas Hammarberg, the Council of Europe's commissioner for human rights, said he believed Britain had gone too far in helping to bring about a "surveillance society". In a report drawing on personal data infringements across Europe but "inspired" by Britain's plan for a new internet, email and telephone database, he added: "General surveillance raises serious democratic problems which are not answered by the repeated assertion that those who have nothing to hide have nothing to fear. This puts the onus in the wrong place: it should be for states to justify the interferences they seek to make on privacy rights."

    He said he was "very worried about the downgrading of the protections of personal information", adding: "Of course there has to be a balance to be struck. At the moment we have not got it right."

    David Howarth, the Liberal Democrat justice spokesman, added: "The Government shouldn't try to sneak through further building blocks of its surveillance state. Unrestricted data-sharing simply increases the risks of data loss. This is particularly troubling since the Government has already shown itself entirely incapable of keeping our personal data safe."

    The data-sharing measure is referred to in the Coroners and Justice Bill outlined in yesterday's Queen's Speech. It could, for instance, pave the way for medical records to be sent to the Driver and Vehicle Licensing Agency to identify drivers who pose a health risk, or school attendance data being handed to the Department for Work and Pensions to verify social security claims made by parents.

    But civil rights groups warned that the possibility of public records being transferred to private companies on a minister's whim was of even greater concern. Under the existing system, public bodies require primary legislation to authorise the transfer of data to another agency. The new plans would end such parliamentary scrutiny by permitting ministers to use secondary legislation without a full vote of MPs. The Bill sets out how ministers would be able to sidestep data protection and human rights laws that prevent public bodies revealing private information.

    NO2ID, a group which campaigned against government plans for ID cards and the associated National Identity Register, said the proposals went far beyond data protection and were intended "to build the database state, concealed under a misleading name". The group's national co-ordinator, Phil Booth, said: "This is a Bill to smash the rule of law and build the database state in its place. Burying sweeping constitutional change in obscure Bills is an appalling approach. Having proved – and admitted – they cannot be trusted to look after our secrets, they are still determined to steal what privacy we have left. Parliament needs to wake up before it has no say any more."

    Civil liberties groups said the new powers could be used in conjunction with the equally controversial plan for a giant database holding details of people's emails, telephone calls and internet searches. The Communications Data Bill, which would contain this information, was set for inclusion in yesterday's Queen's Speech but will now be part of a consultation paper to be published in January.

    Mr Hammarberg said Britain's poor record on data loss had led to an EU-wide debate about the dangers of a surveillance society. He added: "Data protection is crucial to the upholding of fundamental democratic values: a surveillance society risks infringing this basic right."

    The Ministry of Justice said data-sharing was essential for the delivery of "efficient and effective public services, tackling crime and protecting the public". "Any draft order would require parliamentary approval and a privacy impact assessment," said a spokesman. "Additionally, the Information Commissioner would have been invited to comment on the proposals. This will ensure any potential privacy issues and risks are identified and examined.

    "The power will be exercised only in circumstances where the sharing of the information is in the public interest and proportionate to the impact on any person adversely affected by it."

  • Just a thought from a sceptical voter

    In the USA and maybe in big corporations worldwide, as soon as anyone is informed that they are to be "Let go" or (in English) sacked; the company security guards stand over them while they clear their desks and leave the building, This is to avoid sabotage and theft by the disgruntled employee.

    In the USA and maybe in countries worldwide, as soon as a president or (in English) prime minister is voted out of office, the outgoing official is allowed to hang on for months; giving them and their staff the opportunity to install carefully constructed pitfalls for their successors and carry out subtle sabotage by means of remaining legislative acts and the repeal or modification of existing laws of the land.

    - or am I just being paranoid?

  • Borrowed from Mattk

    Hi to everybody...read this article on MattK's post and thought it was very interesting so am posting it here for your perusal and comment...LOL...
    The Illusion of Reality

    Life is like a dream -- you never know you're asleep, trapped in an illusion, until you wake up.

    In our three-dimensional plane of existence, the world is not what it seems. What appears to be solid is basically empty space. Everything we perceive, such as earth, stars, animals, vegetation, people, buildings, etc., is made up of atoms. An atom consists of electrons orbiting a nucleus of protons. It's an assembly of energy, not solid matter. And it's more than 99 percent empty space.

    Therefore, everything we perceive as solid is basically a glob of energy.

    Furthermore, what we call "everything" (the universe and beyond) is made up of a vast array of frequencies or vibrations. Human senses are based on frequencies. Humans are only able to visualize "objects" that reflect light. The frequency range of human sight is exceedingly miniscule compared to what exists all around us.

    Therefore, humans are unable to perceive alternate dimensions driven by other frequencies.

    Eastern religions (Hinduism, Sikhism, etc.) believe the material world is an illusion. They call this illusion Maya. Unlike true reality, which is changeless and eternal, Maya (illusion) is all that has a beginning and an end.

    The path of spiritual enlightenment requires understanding of the Seven Pillars of Ancient Wisdom.

    1) All things, organic or inorganic, from atom to galaxy, contain a living presence.

    2) Every living presence resides within the body of a greater being.

    3) Every being is made in the image of an ultimate greater being.

    4) The vibration of every living presence is felt by every other living presence in our solar system.

    5) Our solar system is constructed from energies which vibrate to seven levels.

    6) Energy and matter are interchangeable. The material world is an illusion.

    7) There is no death, only a change of state.

    In a world where people exist in a temporary life spanning seven or eight decades, feverishly attempting to accumulate things, modern science appears to be catching up with ancient wisdom.

    In 1982, physicist Alain Aspect (University of Paris) discovered that "under certain circumstances subatomic particles such as electrons are able to instantaneously communicate with each other regardless of the distance separating them." It doesn't matter if they are 10 feet or 10 billion miles apart, somehow each particle always seems to know what the other is doing. This may be one of the most important discoveries in history.

    This revelation would confirm step 4 in the Seven Pillars of Ancient Wisdom, which would seem to lend credence to the previous three steps as well. The universe is basically a living entity made up of living entities.

    Physicist David Bohm (University of London) believes Aspect's findings suggest that material reality does not exist. Despite the apparent solidity of the universe, it's actually a hologram (a three-dimensional "image" that is an illusion of a three-dimensional solid reality). Bohm contends that the subatomic particles are able to remain in contact with one another because their separateness is also an illusion.

    If true, this would verify step 6 of the Seven Pillars of Ancient Wisdom that the material world is an illusion.

    Aspect's discovery would explain such human paranormal phenomena as psychic abilities, remote viewing, out-of-body journeys, near-death experiences, precognitive renderings, premonitions, etc. A woman in Detroit has a bad "feeling" about her son in Seattle just before he has an auto crash, or a person who nurtures his plants with kindness has a garden that flourishes. Everything is connected, regardless of time or distance.

    Neurophysiologist Karl Pribram (Stanford University), a proponent of a holographic universe, has theorized that memories are not encoded in neurons of the brain but rather in patterns of nerve impulses that crisscross the entire brain. Experiments were conducted whereby various portions of the brain of a rat were removed yet the rat was still able to perform tasks (its memory remained intact). According to Pribram, the brain itself is a hologram.

    The findings of Bohm and Pribram have become known as the "Holographic Paradigm" in the scientific community. While many scientists are skeptical of this theory, there's also a growing group of researchers who believe these speculations may be the most accurate model of reality so far.

    There is no physical world.

    We are not objects.

    We are perceivers of objects.

    According to certain Native American folklore, the Great Spirit that lives within the Great Mystery gathered all the animals on Mother Earth and said, "I must conceal the Realization, that humans create their own reality, until they are able to comprehend it."

    The Buffalo, most sacred of all animals, said, "I will bury it in the great plains."

    "No, humans will dig and find it there," replied the Great Spirit.

    The Whale, keeper of ancient knowledge, said, "I will carry it to the bottom of the ocean."

    "No, humans will go there one day and find it," replied the Great Spirit.

    The eagle, close to the heavens where the Great Spirit dwells, said, "I'll fly it to the moon."

    "No, humans will soon go there too and find it," replied the Great Spirit.

    The Owl, essence of true wisdom, said, ""Put it inside them."

    "Yes," replied the Great Spirit. "It is the last place they will look."

    I am an illusion named Bret, masquerading as a human being on a small planet in a far corner of an average galaxy, wondering why.

    I am a mystery within the Great Mystery.

    _

    Quote for the Day -- "It is your mind that creates the world." Buddha

    _

  • bonus reality check

    The Centre for Economics and Business Research calculates that U.K. bankers alone have reaped more than 31 billion pounds in bonuses over the past four years.

    That's GBP 31,000,000,000. Personal pay. On top of salary.

    With no personal risk. And no personal financial investment. In 48 months.

    I find it difficult regard this amount of money arriving in bankers personal pockets in such a short time as other than a misappropriation of the assets of the non-banking community, whether legal or not. While technically legal, SIVs, derivatives, CDSs, the off balance sheet charade, and the blind eyes willfully turned to risk management have purposely made a farce of moral hazard and regulation. Regulation that was not the enemy of so called free enterprise, but regulation that was put in place on behalf of society to stop the very things that have happened and to provide stability to a system on which all of us are dependant.

    Each and every one of us (and that will include our children) is being forced through taxes to recapitalise banks which are crippled in part because so much cash has been taken out by the people who work(ed) there, and in part because the so called assets created by the bankers (paid commission up front) turn out suddenly to actually be worth pence in the pound.

    I deeply resent the economic carnage and personal pain this has caused, and will continue to cause to the people around me and the country I live in. And it is utterly galling that in such a short time many bankers have become rich forever on the proceeds of the very deals we are all having to pay for now.

    It is time as a society to decide whether we will tolerate inactively such pain for the many for the excesses of so few. Excesses made in breach of the spirit, if not the letter, of regulation and fiduciary duties owed. It is time to decide whether these same bankers should be publicly shamed or legislated into returning at least a proportion of enormous amount of money extracted up front from deals which have proven cataclysmic for everyone else.

    I suggest a six year retrospective tax hike to 50 per cent on all bonuses up to GBP 2 million, and 75 per cent over that. Fair? After all, we are all being asked to retrospectively pay for these excessive bonuses by government borrowing on our behalf to get capital back into the banks.

    from here

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